to think it takes the piss to have to pay £100 a year to continue nursing?

I have been a nurse in the NHS for over 10 years now, and each year I have had to pay a yearly fee to maintain my professional registration. Last year the fee was £76, and this year it has increased to a whopping £100.Obviously I earn an enormous salary as a nurse so I can easily afford this .Does anyone else thinks this takes takes the bloody biscuit really? As I understand it other professionals have to pay an annual fee to stay on a professional register too. I was wondering how these fees compare to the one for the NMC.

Architects Registration £98.50 a year compulsory + insurance (depends on practice) If your a chartered architect there is another fee on top of this which depends on how many years qualified which for me is £383 although they've kindly reduced this to £74 as I was made redundant at the end of last year. No reduction in the £98.50 which I daren't allow to lapse as A) I can't legally call myself an architect without it and B) if I need to rejoin the register after a lapse it costs me hundreds of poundsIt would be fine but you don't do architecture for the money!

Wouldn't be so bad if the NMC were competent, but they're in special measures. FTP hearings take a number of years to come to panel, which allows nurses of questionable performance to continue working agency or bank for several years after they have dismissed from substantive roles for gross misconduct.

I also have to pay £16.20 per month for my RCN membership (union). Now it really does pain me to pay that as I don't feel that I get much for it. Mind you, its something that I would never do without. God forbid ever actually needing legal representation for a work related issue. So really in that respect I guess it is worth it.

I really think my union fees are well worth it. The legal representation is obviously very important when you are dealing with vulnerable people, but when you look at the negotiations with government over pensions and working conditions I feel they've got my back. The idea of a Tory government and no union representation isn't worth contemplating.

£360 or so for Chartered Accountancy and I understand its £800 odd for the Society although DH's firm pays his fees. Mine doesn't. It is tax deductible and all you have to do is write to HMRC and explain and then they amend your tax code. It helps although I'm very sceptical about what the ICAEW actually does for its £360.

In Scotland we pay GTCS fees which are about £60 a year. I also pretty much have to be a member of a union in order to have legal protection etc. that is £160 a year as I belong to an expensive, but strike adverse, one.

Doctors have to pay £400 a year GMC registration and licence fees, then medical defence fees on top of that depending on your speciality, typically £3000-4000 a year for that. Also the postgrad exams we have to do to fully specialise (it's cost me around £3000 for that so far) then having to pay for our CCT (I'll have to check what that amount is, I vaguely remember it to be about £1000).

I know for the GMC if you are on mat leave you can pay a reduced amount though they don't like to tell you that, I only found out 2 months after I finished mat leave!

Vexed nope most architects are on reduced wages (many since 2008) facing redundancy or like me redundant. Architects have been hit very hard by the recession. I now have a lot of 'former architect' friends which is shit after so much training (min 7yrs)

I'm a Sport & Remedial Massage Therapist and there's the registration with the Institute to pay (around £60), the insurance (not high, but have to remain a member of the Institute of Sport & Remedial Massage Therapists to get this insurance), and have to pay for own CPD throughout the year in order to maintain Institute membership, and regular first aid updates etc etc. Overall - a few hundred pounds a year and most of us are self-employed so no employer to pay any of it.

On a good note, at least you (well all of us actually) can claim this back against our income if you do an annual tax return.

Who says I don't do it for the money? Of course I do! I have bills to pay and children to feed. It really gets my goat when people assume nurses work for the love of the job. I love my job and I care well for my patients, but if I didn't have to work then I probably stay at home with my children rather than packing them off to nursery!

Public sector employee here, also on pay freeze, and working cost neutral atm because of childcare costs. I am an Engineering Geologist and am lucky enough to pay two professional bodies. To maintain chartered status with The Geological Society and also as a graduate member of the Institution of Civil Engineers, both cost around £200 a year. Each.